Someone asked me the other day if we have seen improvements in our kids since they have entered our home. She asked because to her it seemed like we were barely making it through our days when the kids first arrived. And she was right. And we have seen improvements....drastic improvements. Here are some of the biggest:
Speech: When they first came all three of the kids main form of communication was to point and grunt. While we still have this happen at times, particularly after hard visits. The kids are using there words not only to get what they need from us but to have conversations, to let their desires be known, and to talk others outside of our family. This is particularly huge for Little Man who was only saying a handful of words after a month of living with us. Now he speaks in full sentences with us and will occasionally converse with those he doesn't know.
Reading: I remember the first time I tried to read a book to these kids. Little Man had NO interest, Baby Girl sat through one page, and Big Brother had to be playing with something while listening. It was a shock to both Tony and my system as we had raised Addilece on books. That girl could sit for an hour and read, if not more, and she was only 2. Now, they are almost as thrilled about reading as Addilece is. The other day I sat Baby Girl down with a pile of books and she contently sat there for 20 minutes flipping through them. If we sit down to read with one child within seconds we have the rest clamoring around us with a book in hand to read to them.
Socially: Going to a store the first time was awful. It's still not the thrill of our lives but the kids can make it through a shopping trip with out too much drama and usually walking on their own. They are also interacting with adults and peers better. They can function socially. It's fun to see them make connections with others.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Picture Perfect: Demolation
We recently start remodeling our downstairs bathroom. It is nasty! Addilece has fondly labeled it the "Yucky Bathroom". We are so excited to finally be able to have a second bathroom.
Friday, March 22, 2013
Picture Perfect: First Day of School
We just had our 4th first day of school. There was an opening in the afternoon class of the PreK program that Little Man is in. Sweet Pea happened to be the next one on the list. This was a super hard decision for us but we decided due to our lives right now that this was a good move for her. She loves the Princess book bag Daddy bought for her.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Hope
Hope.
As a born again believer it's something I sing about, quote verses about, and pray about. Hope is powerful. And I am thankful for the hope I find in Jesus Christ. I would be no where with out it.
As a foster parent I have begun to see hope in a different light.
My kids are filled with hope. Hope that their parents will do what they said they would do. Hope that their parents will be where they want them to be. Hope that the judge will say "yes" they can go home at the next court date.
Even when we tell them that their is no hope for something to happen they still have hope. That is, until they stare what they were hoping for in the face. Until, they realize that their hope was for nothing. That indeed what we said would happen actually did.
Those are hard moments, hard days, hard weeks. To watch the life get squeezed out of child because their hope has completely vanished.
Yet a few days later their hope is rekindled. Sometimes hope prevails, many times it does not.
Hope is a powerful weapon. It has the power to encourage and uplift. And when it doesn't work out, it has to power to destroy and damage.
I hope that one day my kids will be able to place their hope in eternal things. I hope their hearts heal. I hope they will not completely give up.
As a born again believer it's something I sing about, quote verses about, and pray about. Hope is powerful. And I am thankful for the hope I find in Jesus Christ. I would be no where with out it.
As a foster parent I have begun to see hope in a different light.
My kids are filled with hope. Hope that their parents will do what they said they would do. Hope that their parents will be where they want them to be. Hope that the judge will say "yes" they can go home at the next court date.
Even when we tell them that their is no hope for something to happen they still have hope. That is, until they stare what they were hoping for in the face. Until, they realize that their hope was for nothing. That indeed what we said would happen actually did.
Those are hard moments, hard days, hard weeks. To watch the life get squeezed out of child because their hope has completely vanished.
Yet a few days later their hope is rekindled. Sometimes hope prevails, many times it does not.
Hope is a powerful weapon. It has the power to encourage and uplift. And when it doesn't work out, it has to power to destroy and damage.
I hope that one day my kids will be able to place their hope in eternal things. I hope their hearts heal. I hope they will not completely give up.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Goals
LAST WEEK:
SELF:
*Complete the 1st week of the Couch to 5K program. (The weather turned out WAY colder than I expected....I was able to run one of the three days. I'll keep starting the first week until I feel like I can get a consistent work out in)
MINISTRY:
*Work on KC for 3 hours.
FOSTER CARE:
*Fill out paperwork for Big Brother.
*Spend 10 minutes a night filling out behavior journal.
KIDS:
*Work on Awana 4 nights a week with Big Brother (3 days) and Addilece (2 days).
TONY & I:
*Read the Bible together 4 nights a week.
FINANCES:
THIS WEEK:
SELF:
*Complete the 1st week of the Couch to 5K program.
*Write a Getting Real Blog post
MINISTRY:
*Work on Awana for 3 hours.
*Work on KC for 3 hours.
FOSTER CARE:
*Complete Big Brother's paperwork.
*Spend 10 minutes a night filling out behavior journal.
KIDS:
*Work on Awana 4 nights a week with Big Brother and Addilece.
*Do 3 to 5 school activities with Big Brother
*Spend 1 hour doing specific sensory activities.
TONY & I:
*Read the Bible together 4 nights a week.
*Ask Tony what he wants done and do it.
FINANCES:
*Update the check book.
Friday, March 15, 2013
Picture Perfect: Snow Day
Our boys had a snow day recently. One of our kids don't handle changes like that well. The new schedule throws them for a complete loop. So I decided to meet the problem head on. I took floor tape my parents had given us and made a "town" for their cars, Little People, and buildings. It was pretty successful. They played for 2 1/2 hours straight, which is pretty incredible. It didn't take away the struggle from the one child but put a cushion between them and their siblings so I could deal with it.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Q and A: Adoption
The talk of adoption comes up a lot with Foster Care. When I have a
friend who brings a new child into their home I find myself
wondering about the "a" word. Here are the two most common questions we
get along those lines.
Are they adoptable?
Sometimes Foster Parents can give a pretty definite "yes" or "no" on this subject. We were able to with Our Guy. Most times Foster Parents have no clue if their kids will be adoptable. Plans for the family usually take over a month to formulate (at least where we live) and from there it is based on what our parents do and a whole lot of people who don't work with your kids directly. It's rather scary, actually. Foster Parents are pretty far removed from the decision. In front of them are the Caseworker, the GAL (kids' attorney), the State's Attorney, and ultimately the Judge.
We are at a point in our case in which we think we know which way we will go. We are not sharing what we think it is favoring at this time because it might not go that way or it might drag on for a LONG time. Most kids are in the system for over a year. Our kids are just about to hit 8 months.
The short answer is we don't know. And we won't know until a Petition to Terminate is filed and accepted or the kids start the return home processes. We live by court dates and decisions.
Will you adopt them?
For Tony and myself there is only one answer to this question, there has always been one answer. After much talking, reading, counsel, and above all else-prayer, we came to the conclusion that when a child enters our home they stay here as long as the State allows. We have lots of reasons behind that (and it would be a blog post in itself), but more then anything this is where we feel God has led us. And when we pray about saying yes to children we do it with this in mind.
That being said, not every family has been led down that path. Some families are strictly adoption (children who are legally free, infant or private adoptions, or international). Other families are foster to adopt (children are not legally free but that is the path they are headed down). And some families are just foster families (if a child is available for adoption then they are placed with an adoptive family). Still others float between these based on the child(ren). No decision is right or wrong, as long as each one is taken before the Lord.
So the short answer to this is, yes we will adopt if it comes to that. The thing that actually surprises us is how many people are surprised by that. We do desire to grow our family and we do feel God has chosen (at this time) to do it through Foster Care. However, above all else we want these children in the home God desires for them.
Are they adoptable?
Sometimes Foster Parents can give a pretty definite "yes" or "no" on this subject. We were able to with Our Guy. Most times Foster Parents have no clue if their kids will be adoptable. Plans for the family usually take over a month to formulate (at least where we live) and from there it is based on what our parents do and a whole lot of people who don't work with your kids directly. It's rather scary, actually. Foster Parents are pretty far removed from the decision. In front of them are the Caseworker, the GAL (kids' attorney), the State's Attorney, and ultimately the Judge.
We are at a point in our case in which we think we know which way we will go. We are not sharing what we think it is favoring at this time because it might not go that way or it might drag on for a LONG time. Most kids are in the system for over a year. Our kids are just about to hit 8 months.
The short answer is we don't know. And we won't know until a Petition to Terminate is filed and accepted or the kids start the return home processes. We live by court dates and decisions.
Will you adopt them?
For Tony and myself there is only one answer to this question, there has always been one answer. After much talking, reading, counsel, and above all else-prayer, we came to the conclusion that when a child enters our home they stay here as long as the State allows. We have lots of reasons behind that (and it would be a blog post in itself), but more then anything this is where we feel God has led us. And when we pray about saying yes to children we do it with this in mind.
That being said, not every family has been led down that path. Some families are strictly adoption (children who are legally free, infant or private adoptions, or international). Other families are foster to adopt (children are not legally free but that is the path they are headed down). And some families are just foster families (if a child is available for adoption then they are placed with an adoptive family). Still others float between these based on the child(ren). No decision is right or wrong, as long as each one is taken before the Lord.
So the short answer to this is, yes we will adopt if it comes to that. The thing that actually surprises us is how many people are surprised by that. We do desire to grow our family and we do feel God has chosen (at this time) to do it through Foster Care. However, above all else we want these children in the home God desires for them.
Monday, March 11, 2013
Weekly Goals
This was not such a successful week for goal completion. However, I spent a TON of time working on Awana and was gone all Friday night and all day Saturday. We spent yesterday doing some deep cleaning so I'm a bit more motivated to kick this week into gear.
THIS WEEK: SELF:
MINISTRY:
*Work on KC for 3 hours. (30 minutes)
FOSTER CARE:
*Begin to fill out Little Man's paperwork.
KIDS:
*Work on Awana 4 nights a week with Big Brother and Addilece. (3 x's each)
*Do school with Big Brother 3 times.
*Do school activities with Little Man 3 times.
TONY & I:
*Read the Bible together 4 nights a week. (2 times)
*Finish sorting papers for Tony from the request the last two weeks.
FINANCES:
*Have a bi weekly financial meeting.
*Update the check book.
THIS WEEK:
SELF:
*Complete the 1st week of the Couch to 5K program.
MINISTRY:
*Work on KC for 3 hours.
*Work on Awana for 3 hours.
FOSTER CARE:
*Fill out paperwork for Big Brother.
*Spend 10 minutes a night filling out behavior journal.
KIDS:
*Work on Awana 4 nights a week with Big Brother and Addilece.
*Do 3 Fine Motor activities with Addilece.
*Do 4 to 6 school activities with Little Man.
*Spend 1 hour doing specific sensory activities.
TONY & I:
*Read the Bible together 4 nights a week.
*Ask Tony what he wants done and do it.
FINANCES:
*Have a bi weekly financial meeting.
*Update the check book
Friday, March 8, 2013
A Book for Children in Foster/Adoptive Families
As we began our journey into the Foster Care system I started a mad search for a book. I wanted something that would help explain to Addilece what was going to happen. I came up with nothing. There are lots of books to explain to Foster Children what they are going through (one we really like is Maybe Days) and explain to children why they don't look like their families, and what its like to be part of their family.
Then we ran across an interesting book in Little Man's Scholastic Book Order. We bought it and it arrived the other day. We were more then pleased when we got it home. The book, Bear with Me.
This a cute little book about a little boy whose world is perfect. He has his parents and his blocks, but one day his parents bring Gary the Bear home. Now his parents say their family is complete, but Owen is not convinced.
This story goes through how Owen handles the new member of his family who takes his parent's time, forces him to share his toys, and snores. In the end Owen discovers that new is not always bad, and is glad to have Gary in his family.
As this books walks Owen through his new life I saw so many of the situations that Addilece struggled with as we brought new kids into our home. I highly recommend this book to any family bringing new children in their home. This book provides an aid to help explain what it will be like to welcome new kids into your home at an age appropriate level.
I was not asked to give this review. I also did not receive anything for this recommendation.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
The Sweetest Words
"I uv ooo."
I stopped sweeping and tried not to drop the broom in my hand. I turned to face Little Man, taking a deep breath. Had I heard that right? Had he really said "I love you"?
"I love you too buddy."
He gave me a quick smile and trotted off to play. My world, however, had stopped.
Baby Girl and Big Brother have given "I love you's" since the day they moved in. They weren't real, we aren't sure they even are now. Little Man held back. We would say it to him and stop and repeat it just to make sure he had heard. The words never came though. He was very intentional about NOT saying it.
Six months later he let the words out. And he meant it! After that moment the words flowed freely from his mouth. He was ready to love back.
So many times we hear people say they could never do Foster Care because they could never love a child and give that child back. I feel sad that they will not have the love in the first place.
We have no clue how long Little Man will be in our home. However, we count it a privilege for everyday that we get to see those dimples, get those knock you down hugs, and hear those sweet words. Our lives are better because of him!
I stopped sweeping and tried not to drop the broom in my hand. I turned to face Little Man, taking a deep breath. Had I heard that right? Had he really said "I love you"?
"I love you too buddy."
He gave me a quick smile and trotted off to play. My world, however, had stopped.
Baby Girl and Big Brother have given "I love you's" since the day they moved in. They weren't real, we aren't sure they even are now. Little Man held back. We would say it to him and stop and repeat it just to make sure he had heard. The words never came though. He was very intentional about NOT saying it.
Six months later he let the words out. And he meant it! After that moment the words flowed freely from his mouth. He was ready to love back.
So many times we hear people say they could never do Foster Care because they could never love a child and give that child back. I feel sad that they will not have the love in the first place.
We have no clue how long Little Man will be in our home. However, we count it a privilege for everyday that we get to see those dimples, get those knock you down hugs, and hear those sweet words. Our lives are better because of him!
Monday, March 4, 2013
Weekly Goals
THIS WEEK:
MINISTRY:
*Work on KC for 3 hours.
FOSTER CARE:
KIDS:
*Work on Awana 4 nights a week with Big Brother and Addilece. (BB-3 days, A-2 days)
*Spend hour doing specific sensory activities. (We did not do set sensory time but our boys were major sensory seekers this week and they did plenty of what we would of done on their own.)
TONY & I:.
*Read the Bible together 4 nights a week. (2 times)
*Ask Tony what he wants done most every week- file old paper work,
FINANCES:
*Have a financial meeting.
THIS WEEK:
SELF:
*Write a Getting Real blog post.
MINISTRY:
*Work on KC for 3 hours.
*Work on Awana for 3 hours.
FOSTER CARE:
*Spend 10 minutes a night filling out behavior journal.
*Begin to fill out Little Man's paperwork.
KIDS:
*Work on Awana 4 nights a week with Big Brother and Addilece.
*Do school with the girls 3 times.
*Do school with Big Brother 3 times.
*Do school activities with Little Man 3 times.
*Spend 1 hour doing specific sensory activities.
TONY & I:
*Read the Bible together 4 nights a week..
*Finish sorting papers for Tony from the request the last two weeks.
FINANCES:
*Have a bi weekly financial meeting.
*Update the check book.
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